Early history Aboriginal peoples such as the
Wulgurukaba,
Bindal,
Girrugubba,
Warakamai and
Nawagi originally inhabited the Townsville area. The Wulgurukaba claim to be the
traditional owners of the Townsville city area; the Bindal had a claim struck out by the
Federal Court of Australia in 2005. The Wulgurukaba people call their country
Gurrumbilbarra, while the Bindal call their country
Thul Garrie Waja.
James Cook visited the Townsville region on his first voyage to Australia in 1770 but did not land there. Cook named nearby Cape Cleveland,
Cleveland Bay and
Magnetic Island. In 1819, Captain
Phillip Parker King and botanist
Alan Cunningham were the first Europeans to record a local landing.
Establishment The
Burdekin River's seasonal flooding made the establishment of a seaport north of the river essential to the nascent inland cattle industry.
John Melton Black of Woodstock Station, an employee of Sydney entrepreneur and businessman
Robert Towns, dispatched
Andrew Ball, Mark Watt Reid and a detachment of 8 troopers of the
Native Police under the command of
John Marlow to search for a suitable site. The next group of colonists, led by W. A. Ross, arrived at Cleveland Bay from Woodstock Station on 5 November that year. In 1866, Robert Towns visited for three days, his first and only visit. He agreed to provide ongoing financial assistance to the new settlement and Townsville was named in his honour. In 1915, the train line extended from Townsville out to Alligator Creek and in 1946 there was a dispute with workers who left work 15 minutes early to catch the 4:30 pm train back to town and the factory threatened to sack 340 workers reporting that it wasn’t 15 minutes but some had stopped working at 3:45 or 4 pm.
Importation of South Sea Islander labour On 8 July 1866,
Robert Towns imported the first boatload of
South Sea Islanders into Townsville to labour on the cane and cotton farms. They numbered 56 and arrived on the Blue Bell, which had brought them from the
Loyalty Islands and the
New Hebrides. Charges were made against
Henry Ross Lewin, the recruiter for Robert Towns, that some of the Islanders had been
kidnapped to work on the plantations. In 1867, a magisterial enquiry was set up into the death of an Islander working on one of Towns' plantations. A pharmacist attending was of the opinion the death was caused by a lack of proper nourishment, the Islanders receiving only cornmeal for food. Other evidence was given by employees of the plantation company who claimed the labourers were treated well, and a verdict of death by natural causes was declared. Recent research has shown that the many allegations of blackbirding and slave conditions relating to the recruitment and employment of South Sea Islanders in Queensland are baseless, and without foundation in fact or reliable historical evidence.
Turn of the century Townsville's population was 4,000 people in 1882 and grew to 13,000 by 1891. The foundation stone of the Townsville Cenotaph was laid in Strand Park on 19 July 1923. It was unveiled on 25 April 1924 (
Anzac Day) by the
Governor of Queensland,
Matthew Nathan.
Townsville/Thuringowa The rural land surrounding the city was initially managed by the Thuringowa Road Board, which eventually became the
Shire of Thuringowa. The shire ceded land several times to support Townsville's expansion. In 1986 the Shire became incorporated as a city, governed by the
Thuringowa City Council. The cities of Townsville and Thuringowa were amalgamated into the "new"
Townsville City Council in March 2008, as part of the Queensland state government's reform program. With the introduction of the
White Australia policy, the demand for Japanese workers decreased, causing the consulate to finally close in 1908. During
World War II, the city was host to more than 50,000, and
Townsville Naval Section Base. American and Australian troops and air crew were stationed here, and Townsville became a major staging point for battles in the
South West Pacific. A large United States Armed Forces contingent supported the war effort from seven airfields and other bases around the city and in the region. Many buildings, schools and 177 private houses were commandeered for use by the military. Slit trenches were dug in many places, and 18 concrete air-raid shelters were built, six of them in Flinders Street. The first bombing raid on
Rabaul, in Papua New Guinea, on 23 February 1942 was carried out by six B-17s based near Townsville. Some of the units based in Townsville were: •
No. 3 Fighter Sector RAAF, Wulguru & North Ward •
No. 1 Wireless Unit RAAF, Pimlico & Stuart & Roseneath •
North Eastern Area Command HQ, Townsville, Sturt Street (now the Federation building) •
Castle Hill, Townsville tunnels & bunkers •
Green St. Bunker, West End, Sidney Street West End, Project 81 (now the
SES building) •
96th Engineer Battalion (which mutinied in April 1942.) In July 1942,
three small Japanese air raids were conducted against Townsville, which was by then the most important air base in Australia. On 25 July 1942 two Japanese
Kawanishi Flying Boats dropped 15 bombs which landed near the mouth of the Ross River, only east of oil tanks in the harbour. On 28 July, one Japanese plane dropped eight bombs near the
Garbutt airfield. On 29 July 1942, a single
"Emily" Flying Boat dropped one bomb at the Experimental Station of
Oonoonba and seven bombs landed in Cleveland Bay where bomb craters are still clearly visible. There were no deaths and structural damage was minimal, as the Japanese missed their intended targets of the railway, the harbour and the airfield and destroyed a palm tree at the Experimental Station of Oonoonba. Although the Japanese aircraft were intercepted on two of the three raids, none was shot down.
1960s and 1970s In 1961 the
University of Queensland established a campus at
Pimlico, near
Pimlico State High School, later developing a site at
Douglas near the Army Barracks, and across the new Nathan Street Bridge. The faculties of Arts, Law, and Education, and several residential colleges, Union, St Mark's, and John Flynn relocated from central Townsville. This was followed by the relocation of St Raphael's college for women. A large modernist building was established. In March 1962, first year university students painted the stick figure depicting
The Saint on Castle Hill as a prank. The Tasmanian historian
Henry Reynolds, arriving into Townsville in 1965 to fulfil a position as a lecturer at the nascent
James Cook University, noted the initial impressions the city had on him: I arrived at the end of the long dry season, which had succeeded an usually poor wet season. Water was scarce. Gardens, parks, open space, the hills around were burnt off and bare. Clumps of dead grass collected wind-blown rubbish. Most of the houses stood up on stumps, perched uneasily between the baked earth and the vast vitreous sky. Townsville scarcely seemed to be a city at all. There was only one long main street, squeezed in between mud and mangroves on one side and the pink-brown granite of Castle Hill on the other. The sun arched high overhead. The shadows were short, sharp and intense. Many of the older people bore on their arms, necks and faces the ravages of a lifetime in the tropics. Almost everything was different - the light, the sky, the birds, insects, trees, the sounds and smells. But there was much that instantly appealed - brief, brilliant twilights, moon-drenched nights and, above all, the trade winds. In 1971
Cyclone Althea with flooding slowed progress of infrastructural building, but by 1972
James Cook University was established, with ecru academic gowns, quite different to those of older universities. From 1961, only the first years of studies for Medicine and for Veterinary Sciences were offered in Townsville, but the establishment of a new General Hospital at Douglas provided facilities necessary for the establishment of an independent Medical School. In 1970,
Queen Elizabeth II,
the Duke of Edinburgh and
Princess Anne toured Australia including Queensland. The Queensland tour began on Sunday 12 April when the royal yacht
Britannia entered Moreton Bay at Caloundra, sailing into Newstead Wharf. After visiting Brisbane, Longreach and Mount Isa the Royal Family travelled to Mackay. The royal party had a leisurely cruise to Townsville, taking four days to arrive after their departure from Mackay. On the morning of April 20, they were met by The Deputy Mayor of Townsville Mr. T. Aikens, M.L.A. and Mrs Aikens and Mr W.W. Shepherd, Chairman of the Townsville Harbour Board and Mrs Shepherd. The day’s program began with a cavalcade of progress at the Townsville sports reserve. The grounds were filled with crowds and children waving their Australian flag. It was a spectacle for the royal visitors and the local community who came out on the day. Following lunch on board Britannia, the royal family were driven to the site of Queensland’s newest university, the
James Cook University, Townsville campus. In the presence of many dignitaries, HRH Queen Elizabeth II formally granted autonomy to North Queensland’s new educational institution. In 2020, James Cook University celebrated its 50th anniversary with a Treasures exhibition, showcasing 50 collection items from Special Collections, Eddie Koiku Mabo Library, James Cook University, Townsville. The rare collection item – ‘James Cook University Development: Pimlico to the First Chancellor archival footage, 1960 – 1970’ was one of the Treasures selected for the anniversary year. The 12min film preserved on NQHeritage, the University Library’s Special Collections online repository, shows footage of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II arriving at the official ceremony and being introduced to the official party. Their Royal Highnesses first appear in the film at 6:06 minutes. On Christmas Eve 1971, Tropical
Cyclone Althea, a
category 4 cyclone, battered the city and Magnetic Island, causing considerable damage. In 1973, Indigenous activists
Eddie and
Bonita Mabo established the
Black Community School in Townsville, where children could learn their Indigenous culture rather than white culture. Eddie Mabo worked as a gardener at
James Cook University from 1967 to 1975. It was at the university in 1974 that he first learned of the implications of the
terra nullius doctrine which held that he did not legally own the land he believed was his under the traditional land inheritance system of his people.
1980s Buchanan's Hotel in Flinders Street, regarded by architectural historians as Australia's most significant building in the
Filigree style, was lost to fire in 1982. In 1981 a land rights conference was held at James Cook University and Eddie Mabo made a speech to the audience where he explained the land inheritance system on
Murray Island. The significance of this in terms of Australian
common law doctrine was taken note of by one of the attendees, a lawyer, who suggested there should be a test case to claim land rights through the court system. Mabo decided to take on the
Australian Government.
Perth-based solicitor Greg McIntyre was at the conference and agreed to take the case; he then recruited barristers
Ron Castan and Bryan Keon-Cohen. McIntyre represented Mabo during the hearings. The James Cook University Douglas campus library is now named after Mabo.
1990s On 3 June 1992, the
High Court of Australia ruled in favour of Eddie Mabo in
Mabo v Queensland (No 2) recognising native title in Australia for the first time. In 1993, the
New South Wales Rugby League announced that a team from Townsville would be admitted to the expanded, nation-wide competition, and the
North Queensland Cowboys made their debut in the
1995 ARL season.
2000–present In October 2000, a
Solomon Islands Peace Agreement was negotiated in Townsville. In February 2019, Townsville experienced a
major flood event, which caused five deaths. Floodwaters damaged approximately 3300 homes and about 1500 homes were rendered uninhabitable. ==Urban layout==